Wasn’t this supposed to be Ferrari’s pole?

Raikkonen may well rue a lock-up at the final corner on his final qualifying lap. The Finn was on course to take pole from Hamilton until that error and ended up losing out by just 0.045 seconds.

Bottas was using the new aerodynamic upgrade that Mercedes suspected caused problems on Friday. The team split their set-ups on Saturday, with the Finn using the new parts and Hamilton reverting to an older set-up.

It was a remarkable fight back from Mercedes, who were more than a second off the pace in practice on Friday and still 0.5secs off in the final session on Saturday.

But Mercedes were in the ball park from the start of qualifying and Hamilton pulled out another stunning lap to secure pole.

He was faster than Raikkonen by 0.232secs on his first run, and the margin was just too big for the Finn to turn around on his final lap.

“I have no idea how the guys turned it around but I am really grateful,” Hamilton said.

What happened to Vettel?

Vettel did get out in the first qualifying session after the Ferrari mechanics changed his engine, but the German immediately radioed to say he was down on power.

He returned to the pits but the team ran out of time to diagnose the problem, let alone fix it.

Vettel was phlegmatic about his bad luck: “I tend to enjoy what I do and today there was not much to enjoy or do but I am sure it will be a good race,” he said. “We have a very strong car. It is what it is.

“Who knows what will happen tomorrow? The car is quick. That’s maybe why I am pretty relaxed. With a quick car, you can come back, and overtaking is possible here.”

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Van is the man, not Alonso

Behind the big three teams, Esteban Ocon was sixth ahead of McLaren’s Stoffel Vandoorne, impressively out-qualifying team-mate Fernando Alonso despite the Spaniard using the only example of an aerodynamic upgrade that was brought to this race.

Alonso ended up 10th, 0.122secs off the Belgian and behind Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg and the second Force India of Sergio Perez.

Asked whether the new parts worked well, Alonso said: “They didn’t today. Yesterday they were OK and we made public that very clear. Maybe today we need to un-public something.”

Outside the top 10, Hulkenberg’s team-mate Jolyon Palmer was 12th, 0.493secs off the German, and there was an impressive debut by Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly.

The Frenchman was drafted in at the last minute to replace Daniil Kvyat because of the Russian’s underwhelming form and qualified in 15th, just one place and 0.156secs behind team-mate Carlos Sainz despite a slow gear change.

Kvyat’s average deficit to Sainz this year over the previous races was 0.173secs.